Root, Root, Root for the Padres at CECO ‘Fun’raiser

Photo Credit: San Diego Padres

Take your friends and family out to the ball game for County Employees’ Charitable Organization’s spring “fun”raiser at Petco Park. CECO is selling tickets to the Padres’ April 15 game against the San Francisco Giants.

The event is open to all County employees, their family and friends. It’s an easy and fun way to support CECO, which will distribute nearly $168,000 in grants to 95 local nonprofit programs later this month. All the funds come from employees, through payroll deductions or fundraisers like this.

Tickets are $33, and a portion of every ticket sold will go directly back to the nonprofit. Don’t strike out. Get your tickets today.

Quiz: Test Your Ethics Knowledge

Do you know what it means to be ethical? Do you know if you can hire a relative to work under your supervision? Test your knowledge with a short quiz on the County’s ethics program as we mark Ethics Awareness Month.

No need to stop there. Give yourself one extra credit point for taking the Ethics 101 online training. The training on LMS is just 8 minutes long. Add a point for reaffirming your commitment to do the right thing, even when no one is watching. And another extra credit point if you pledge to report misconduct, ethical lapses or anything that doesn’t seem quite right.

If you have a question about an answer on this quiz or a real life ethical dilemma, ask! If you are not comfortable going to your supervisor or manager, or if your concern relates to a supervisor or manager, call the County’s Ethics Hotline at (866) 549-0004. The hotline is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week and is operated by a third party, so employees can report concerns anonymously. Employees can also report concerns online.

Mark your calendars! The Office of Ethics and Compliance will host an Ethics Awareness Month Information Fair later this month. The 5th annual event will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., March 29 at the County Operations Center Plaza. There will be booths, music, a speaker, free goodies and prizes.

Compete in Employee Basketball Tournament

March Madness is coming to San Diego County. The Employee Wellness Program is hosting a basketball tournament for County employees on Saturday, March 24 at the Spring Valley Teen Center.

Get a team together to play in the men’s five-on-five or women’s three-on-three bracket.

Don’t miss out on the fun and friendly competition. Team registration runs through March 16. Find more details and sign up on the Employee Wellness page on InSite.

See you on the court.

Too Much on Your Plate? It's Food Waste Prevention Week

What do your overflowing trash can, a hole in your wallet and climate change all have in common?

Give up? Here’s the answer — wasting food.

It’s hard to believe, but nearly 40 percent of all the food produced in America every year is wasted — much of it bought with our hard-earned cash then scraped off our plates or discarded as leftovers into our trashcans and landfills, costing us money and turning into methane gas that can worsen climate change.

And that’s not all. Wasting uneaten food also wastes the resources it requires: land, water, fertilizer, manpower and money.

That’s why our Board of Supervisors and other agencies around the state have proclaimed March 5-9 to be “Food Waste Prevention Week.” And it’s why the County’s Live Well San Diego Food System Initiative” is offering some simple tips we can all use to stop wasting food.

After all, changing these habits, keeping food out of landfills, keeping more money in family’s pockets, and keeping our environment safe fit right into our County’s Strategic Initiatives — Healthy Families, Safe Communities, Sustainable Environments and Operational Excellence.

So, here are a few tips for how we can all stop wasting food.

Plan and Shop Wisely

You can’t really know what food you need if you don’t know what you plan to eat or what you already have at home. So before you run to the market, plan menus and meals ahead of time. Figure out what ingredients you have and what you’ll need. It will save you money and time, and cut down on having to toss out food that goes bad before you eat it, or just plain doesn’t get eaten. SaveTheFood.com has a “Guest-imater” that can help you calculate how much food you need to prepare, based on how many people you’re serving and how much they typically eat. It can even calculate having leftovers if you want them!

Freeze or Find Ways to Re-use Leftovers

Even the best planners end up with leftovers sometimes. But you don’t have to let them languish in the fridge until they go bad. You can freeze leftovers to use in future meals. You can pack them in to-go containers for lunches. Or, you can re-think your leftovers as ingredients to be used in different meals. Leftover pasta and cooked vegetables can help make a mean frittata. Leftover rice, meat and vegetables can make a great soup, burritos or a casserole.

Got Fruit Trees to Glean?

So those fruit trees in the yard just churn out more fruit than you and the family can eat. Don’t let it go to waste. Feeding San Diego and the San Diego Food System Alliance have links to “gleaner” groups that can collect your extra crop and feed someone else’s family. The San Diego Food Bank has information about how you can start your own food drive.

Compost It!

When you do end up with leftover food and/or food scraps, a lot of it doesn’t have to go in the trash and end up in a landfill — it can go into a compost or worm bin instead. That way you can turn that leftover food into healthy organic compost and fertilizer that can re-inject helpful nutrients and organisms back into your garden or lawn’s soil. Using compost can also cut water use, improve crop production and save gardeners money by not having to buy soil amendments. Learn what can go into your compost.

Visit SaveTheFood.com

The website has tips galore, from “Five Ways to Revive Food,” to “10 Easy Tips for Meal Planning,” and “Cooking with Food Scraps.” It’s also filled with information about how to shop for, cook and store food.

Happy Employee Appreciation Day!

Happy Employee Appreciation Day to the 17,000+ County workers. You are the most important resource our organization has.

Today we celebrate you!

Do you appreciate a coworker, team, department, group or the entire workforce? Leave your own thank you note--comment at the end of this post.

With much thanks, here are some photos, videos and notes of appreciation:

--Jeannette M. Garcia, Senior Departmental HR Officer, ARCC

Tracy Mitchell, Supervising Human Services Specialist/CAL, Eligibility Operations

County Communications Team: You constantly amaze us and amuse us. We appreciate everything you do, especially when you put it on the shared calendar.

-Mike, Tammy, Mike & Tegan

Thank you to William McAvoy and Anna-Mai Trinh for being very flexible and supportive.  I appreciate your everyday dedication and excellence in your work.  It makes the processes run smoother for our patients and their care.

Janis E. Flippo, Senior Office Assistant

TB Control and Refugee Health

Thank-yous for my staff for Employee Appreciation:

Thank you to Jani Dubski and Venus Zayas for taking the time to teach me the operations of the Tuberculosis Control and Refugee Health branch – I deeply appreciate your patience and support!

Thank you to Yi-Ning Cheng for your thoughtful expertise – I’m glad to have you as my partner-in-learning about the medical aspects of TB!

Thank you to Marti Brentnall for your endless energy for Outreach and Education – your dedication and ideas are inspiring!

Thank you to Karla Lopez for making my transition to Public Health a smooth one – it’s so great to have you on my team!

Thank you to Lorena Gonzalez-Fabiny for your dedication and leadership – you and your team serve some of the most marginalized people in our community with respect and dignity!

Thank you to Christine Murto for your ingenuity and flexibility – your dynamic approach stretches the possibilities of what we can do for refugees in San Diego!

Thank you to Lawrence Wang for your can-do attitude, it’s such a pleasure to work with you!

From: Susannah Graves

A special thank you to the SD Probation Dept. Juvenile Intake Support Unit at JPC! Your dedication and excellence drives our success each day!

InTouch – County Jobs That May Surprise You

Helen_Official.jpg

Even though my daily work is dealing with what the County does, I still pause sometimes and marvel at the vast variety of things we’re involved in. The most diversified corporations would never dream of trying to run so many businesses.

Within each of those operations are all kinds of positions. I find it fascinating when I learn about some of the specialized work people are doing here, so I wanted to share a few of the interesting jobs with you. Some may not be especially unusual in themselves, but you may not realize you have County colleagues doing them.

On some of these, I’m using a descriptive title that’s different from the official ones HR uses.

Accident reconstruction specialist

The County maintains about 2,000 miles of road. If there’s a bad accident on one of them, the Public Works department has someone who heads to the scene, gathers evidence, and uses a 3D laser scanner to capture information and – as the job title suggests – reconstruct what happened. The job includes things like interpreting skid marks and understanding the physics of the vehicle. The specialist uses photographs and GPS tools to create 3D models that explain the cause of an accident.

Nutritionist

Our nutritionist is not doing one-on-one consultations. She’s a public health worker, focused on getting whole communities eating right. That includes projects like getting people in underserved neighborhoods access to healthy foods, putting urban agriculture ordinances in place, and helping workplaces create support for breastfeeding mothers. Nutrition educators go to places like schools and farmers markets to put on cooking demonstrations and give lessons on healthy eating.

Penguin appraiser

OK, I made that title up. But among the property whose value is determined by our Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk is exotic animals at SeaWorld. That includes killer whales, polar bears, penguins, seals, and so on – even a two-toed sloth! The Audit-Appraiser – that’s the real title – assigned to this needs special training, as you might imagine. They figure out the value for each animal for property tax purposes.

Historian

County parks – they’ve got a past. And two historians, one on staff and the other a long-time volunteer, document and share the stories of the land, from Native American times through the County’s early settlement and development to the modern era. The historians maintain and constantly add to an archive of photographs, newspaper articles and land deeds. They help make visits to County parks educational by preparing interpretive exhibits, and they often act as a resource for historical societies in the area.

Map maker

That’s a title that does not do justice to the complex work of a geographic information systems analyst, but I started with something we’re all familiar with. The GIS staff does indeed make maps, but the maps are created using all kinds of data and often include analysis to help us understand trends or correlations. They can show us where in the County we have wildfire risk, disease occurrence, types of crime, and on and on. The pictures they give us are an essential tool in deciding where to direct our resources.   

Entomologist

I had a column last year about many of the things the County does to battle bugs. They can threaten the local agriculture industry, native trees and people’s health. So we have a County entomologist as one of the leaders in that fight. The current job-holder, Tracy Ellis, examines thousands of insects caught in traps or found in plant shipments. She’s constantly on the lookout for any invasive species that could pose a danger here.

Chaplain

This one is not actually a County position, but a volunteer who has become a critical member of the Medical Examiner’s team. The office doesn’t just perform death investigations – it works with grieving family members. Chaplain Joe Davis founded a Bereavement Center to help those coping with the sudden loss of a loved one.  The center is one of only a handful in the country, and Davis has received wide recognition for his work.

Landscape architect

You have to be a landscape architect to know whether other landscape architects are doing things right. That’s essentially what this position in Planning & Development Services is doing. The architect reviews landscaping plans for housing and commercial developments, looking at things like trees along streets or in parking lots, pocket parks or other common areas. The architect checks grading plans and makes sure slopes are protected against erosion. Plans have to comply with drought-tolerant regulations and avoid invasive species.

Physicist

Among the numerous things the County inspects are facilities that use radiation equipment, including X-rays. Places like medical and dental offices, research labs and various industrial operations. Health physicists make sure the equipment and materials are used safely and comply with state and federal regulations. They advise those who operate the equipment how to do so safely. 

Broadcast engineer

The County has its own TV channel: County News Center TV (formerly CTN). It carries our Board of Supervisors meetings live, shows stories about what the County does, and has a variety of public affairs programming. There’s a lot of specialized equipment involved, and the technology is constantly changing. Our broadcast engineer is tasked with keeping us on the air and looking sharp.

That’s just a handful of more uncommon positions at the County. The quick look is partly for fun, but also to serve as a reminder of the tremendous number of ways we serve our customers.

All the jobs, familiar or not, play a part in helping us realize our vision of a healthy, safe and thriving region, and your individual contributions are on my mind as we celebrate Employee Appreciation Day tomorrow. I offer my thanks to each and every one of you for the work you do in moving us toward our vision.

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Two County Attorneys Named Judges

Marcella McLaughlin and Saba Sheibani were appointed as San Diego Superior Court judges.A San Diego County deputy district attorney and a deputy public defender are moving to the other side of the bench.

All rise for Marcella McLaughlin and Saba Sheibani as they enter San Diego County Superior courtrooms. The two were among 25 judges appointed by Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. 

McLaughlin had worked since 2005 as a deputy district attorney, and prior to that, as a deputy city attorney in the San Diego City Attorney’s Office. She earned her law degree from the California Western School of Law and a Bachelor of Arts degree from UC San Diego.  

Since 2016, Sheibani has been an assistant supervising attorney at the Public Defender’s Office and served as a deputy public defender since 2004. Sheibani earned her degree at UC Hastings College of the Law.

Public Defender Randy Mize praised Sheibani’s work ethic and dedication to serving others.

“Our loss is certainly the court’s gain as her capacity for excellence and commitment to fairness will make her an exceptional judge,” Mize said.

Buy Your Tickets for CECO's Awards Breakfast

The County Employee’s Charitable Organization (CECO) is proud to have raised $167,990.28 in 2017 and will be distributing grants to 95 local non-profit programs at its annual Awards Breakfast at the County Operations Center on March 15. 

Be a part of the inspiring morning. Buy a ticket to the awards breakfast. Seating is limited so purchase your tickets early. A light breakfast will be from 7 to 7:30 a.m. The program starts at 7:30 a.m. 

The deadline to purchase tickets is March 12. For more information or to reserve your tickets click here.

For questions, please email SDCECO@sdcounty.ca.gov.

County Meteorologist's Forecast for the Weekend and Beyond

The Department of Public Works has its own meteorologist as part of its flood control staff. Here's Rand Allan's forecast for the coming days.

Blustery, cold, and showery weather will continue today, ending by this evening as the storm system in the interior western states moves east and the skies clear. Estimated rain totals will range from zero to less than 0.10 inches. Snow level is around 3500 feet this morning and about 2 inches of total snowfall is expected at the upper elevations. Skies will remain clear and cool through Monday afternoon. A more potent storm moves in Monday night through Tuesday evening with chances for widely scattered light showers Wednesday and Thursday. Models are indicating increasing chances for rain next Friday into the weekend.

Lorena Gonzalez-Fabiny, Supervising Communicable Disease InvestigatorArnel Phil Fabian, Imaging Technician II, ARCC

Photo by Joanne Emerick, Administrative Secretary, Office of Ethics and Compliance

Susan Green, Assistant Chief Information Officer

Teresa Dutra, Senior Assessment Clerk

Martha Landeros, Office Assistant, HHSA

Florence Aquino, Accounting Technician, ARCC